Alien Base: The Evidence for Extraterrestrial Colonization of Earth: TAKE-OFF
When the ‘men’ sat down, one of them pushed a button on a small control-panel and a light came on underneath the button.
The lighting dimmed to near- darkness, and there was a slight jolt.
Immediately after the ship had taken off, a high-pitched whine could be heard, which by Watts’s estimation lasted for about one and a half minutes. A few seconds after this button was pushed, the ship moved forward, and since I didn’t sit down in the chair as I was told to do, I was thrown backward against a partition. One of the men pushed a button on the panel again, and the ship slowed down. They then got up and helped me get into the chair and strapped it across my chest and above my knees.
The metallic-looking chair turned out to be extremely flexible and comfortable, adjusting itself to Watts’s body contours.
We had been traveling about five minutes and it got real cold. They didn’t seem to react to the cold as I did. It got down around freezing. He pushed another button on the panel and in a few minutes it started getting a little warmer. It took about 10 minutes for it to get warm enough for me to quit shaking from the sudden drop in temperature.
We traveled about 20 minutes from the time of take-off when the ship started slowing down and stopped. I heard four metallic clicks, and the wall opposite me between the two chairs slid back to reveal a round-shaped tunnel . . . about five feet high. When I first heard the clicks, the men got up and unbuckled the belts. The nearest man to me said, ‘Let’s go over here’, and led the way through about an eight-foot tunnel into another ship.
WEAPONS?
‘As we stepped from the tunnel into the first room, in the left end of it was something that resembled shelves or racks of some type [which] reached from the ceiling to the floor. There were four shelves which had eight to ten “weapons” on each shelf.’
The weapons were made similar to a rifle or shotgun; however, the overall length was about 28 or 30 inches long. The ‘stock’ was about 12 inches in length. Where our guns have a receiver and trigger, these had neither, but a hand-grip on the stock. In place of a receiver, there were three oval-type discs about one-half inch thick about one and one-half inches apart and five inches around. The barrel started there and was about three inches round. On the opposite wall from these weapons was some kind of cabinet that had pigeonholes in it [in which] were stacks of these round, slotted discs.
THE ‘PHYSICAL’
‘We turned right and walked through an opening which I didn’t see as a door,’ Watts’s report continues. ‘This man stepped to the side of the door and remained on the outside of the room. I was met a short distance inside the room by two more men who explained to me that they were conducting a survey and would appreciate it if I would co-operate and submit myself to a physical. This room looked like the same room that I looked into on March 31 when I saw the larger ship.’
In this room, there was a strong odor that smelled like sulphur. It burned my eyes and I could feel it going down my lungs a little. I could see it every once in a while coming in from a vent around the floor. I had noticed this odor a little before in the small craft and some in the first room that I walked into on this large craft.
They had me walk on to the center of the room where the machine was located, to undress and take the physical. This machine was about six feet tall and 36 inches wide, and cupped in front. They put me in a position in front of the machine, about one and one-half inches from it. There was a large throw- switch about a foot from the top of the machine. They pulled thisswitch down and a light came on on each side of this machine, about five inches from the top. There was a narrow band of glass between each light, about three-eighths of an inch wide. There was also a round control-knob on the left side, about three feet from the floor, which they turned until these two lights came together.
There were four gauges over this machine that were molded into the ceiling.
I couldn’t read any of them. Each one had a needle on it, but I couldn’tread the writing. While they were adjusting the machine, there were round,flexible needles coming out, one about every inch. The needles were about the size of a hypodermic needle. Instead of piercing the skin, they came outand just laid down against the skin. I stood and faced the machine about five minutes and then they turned me around. They put me in position again and re-adjusted it until the lights came together again.
During this time, the machine transferred its information into another machine, starting at the side and extending out about five feet. Out of theother end came a paper about 18 inches wide. One of the two men who seemed to be in control of my taking the physical walked back and forth from me to this paper, about every two minutes. I stood there about five more minutes, and they turned the switch off and said that it was complete. They walked down and got the paper and came back by me, and I asked them ho it turned out. He
said, ‘All I can tell now is that you are about eight pound over-weight.’